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May 5, 2014 4:14 pm - NewsBehavingBadly.com

Jodielynn Wiley fled Paris, Texas where she received death threats and found dead animals on her front porch. She went tothe Carr B. Collins shelter in Dallas run by the Salvation Army.

As she reached the end of her 30-day stay at the emergency shelter, Wiley sought other long-term shelter options. One such option was the a two-year housing program run by the Salvation Army, which several other women from the Collins Center had recently entered. According to the Dallas Voice, when she interviewed for the program with her case worker, Wiley was told she was disqualified because she had not had gender reassignment surgery: “After I said no, she said, ‘Well, that’s why we can’t give you a room. It was putting me in an uncomfortable situation and very rude.” Her counselor then changed the story and claimed that there was a waiting list, but Wiley says that two women who arrived at the emergency shelter after she did had already entered the longer program.

Wiley has now filed a complaint with Dallas’s Fair Housing Office, which protects against discrimination on the basis of gender identity. At stake seems to be an exception in the housing nondiscrimination law, which allows for discrimination on the basis of sex “when the dwelling contains common lavatory, kitchen, or similar facilities available for the use of all persons occupying the dwelling.” The space Wiley was vying for was gender segregated, and so the outcome of the complaint may depend on whether the spirit of the law is to create an exception to discriminate based on an individual’s genitalia or whether to simply allow for gender-specific spaces for safety purposes. The intake staff may also have simply violated the Salvation Army’s own policies about respecting trans identities.

In the meantime, Wiley has found a place to stay through the Shared Housing Project, a new program started by the Trans Pride Initiative. The novel project aims to find trans people with housing who are willing to support those without.

D.B. Hirsch
D.B. Hirsch is a political activist, news junkie, and retired ad copy writer and spin doctor. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.